Happy President's Day: http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047626 +--+--+--+--+--+--+--What's Up Today--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ TEACHING THE WORLD TO SHARE Cory Doctorow from OpenCola talks about peer to peer file sharing, Open Source, and soda pop. http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047627 CONTRL YOUR PC WITH A PALM JD Crouch II shows us how to use your Palm PDA to remotely control your Windows PC. http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047628 LEO & PATRICK SOUNDS Three -- count 'em -- three sets of sounds for your computer. Download them all! http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047629 http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047630 http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047631 HELP & HOW-TO ZONE Can't figure something out? Chances are you'll find the answer in the Help & How-To Zone. http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047632 ALL THE LINKS FROM TODAY'S SHOW http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047633 ***************************ADVERTISEMENT*************************** iWin.com - eXtreme lotto. Win $1 million dollars today! Win thousands of dollars, just for having friends! http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047634 ******************************************************************* +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ The Screen Savers Show Notes for Monday, February 19th, 2001 (repeat of February 13, 2001)... * Upgrade your video card Christopher from Saxonburg, Pennsylvania is on the lookout for a new 3D video card. He wants to upgrade his Voodoo 3000 to a 32 MB GeForce 2 GTS based board, which will cost under $200. (A 64 MB version would cost over $250!) Before he buys, he asked if the nVidia GeForce2 ULTRA 64 MB would be worth the extra cash. The ULTRA costs around $400. Unless you plan on playing lots of games in 32 bit color at resolutions of 1280x1024 or 1600x1200 , well, we wouldn't bother with it. (Most folks don't have monitors that would deal real well with those resolutions!) Why? The GeForce 2 GTS with 32 MB of RAM will deliver most of the Ultra's performance at 1024x768 for half the price. Important Safety Tip! nVidia is slated to debute the NV20, their latest 3D graphics engine later this month. When it ships, exisiting 3D boards should drop in price. So if you can wait till later this month to buy that board, wait! Here's a great link, Anandtech's listings of the best 3D card prices they can find on the web: http://www3.anandtech.com/showdoc.html?i=1415&p=4 * Program your Palm Ben cammed in from Birmingham, Michigan to learn how to write software for the Palm OS. Leo told him that most Palm software gets written in C with the help of special Palm libraries. You'll need to learn C. If you've got that out of the way, then Metrowerks Codewarrior for the Palm OS is the development environ of choice for Palm apps. You'll need a PC to run it on... here's the link, and check to see if they have student discounts: http://www.metrowerks.com/products/palm/ Here's the link to Palm's developer site, which should offer some mo' tidbits for all you would be codebots: http://www.palmos.com/dev/ * Unformat your hard drive Rodney from Houston, Texas works at a small computer store and accidentally formatted a customer's hard drive. What can he do? Oh boy... first off, prepare yourself to tell 'em what you did, 'cause you've done some serious damage. On the upside, since you only did a 'quick format' on the drive, and didn't install or run anything after that, all the data should still be on the drive. That's 'cause a quick format just zaps the FAT table on the drive. The data is still there, tho the FAT doesn't point to it anymore. Not having done anything to that drive since is crucial: the more you run the system, the less likely you are to ever recover that file! (This is especially true of accidentally deleted files.) If they had a ton of data on the drive, you'll need a second drive to copy the data to. And, frankly, you'll need to spend some cash on data recovery software. PowerQuest doesn't offer Lost & Found anymore, though you might be able to find it locally. http://www.powerquest.com/discontinued.html You can also check out Ontrack Data International's EasyRecovery Personal Edition. The free download version lets you save 5 files and see all the files you could save off the drive, if you bought the full $89 download: http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047639 Another data recovery tool you can purchase over the web is LC Technology's Recover98 Version 3.5, $295: http://www.lc-tech.com/Recover98%20stand%20alone.asp Frankly, before we tried to use any data recovery software on the disk (Norton, McAffee, PowerQuest, Ontrack, LC, whatever...) we'd call the customer and tell 'em what happened. Chances are they will loose some of their data. Better warn 'em now, and give them the option of having a proffessional data saving company work on the disk before any more damage gets done to it: http://www.drivesavers.com http://www.datarec.com If you're REALLY lucky, the customer will tell ya they didn't have anything special on there! Here's an article with lots of info on data recovery: http://www.smartcomputing.com/editorial/article.asp?article=articles%2Farchive%2Fl0610%2F14l10%2F14l10%2Easp * Using Norton Ghost Pablo from Secaucus, New Jersey called in to find out how we use Norton Ghost to back up our systems on the set. Well, first thing is to reboot your system in DOS. Then you load Ghost. Then, well, why don't ya'll check out this article: http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047644 One spiffy feature of the newest version of Ghost is that it can burn directly to CD-R/CD-RW disks if you have a burner that Ghost supports! * RDRAM vs SDRAM Vamsi from Kearny, New Jersey called in to find out the difference between RDRAM and SDRAM. Well, in a nutshell RDRAM, or Rambus DRAM, is a high speed memory (well, that's what it was supposed to be) that costs nearly twice as much as SDRAM. In the PC world, it's exclusively used on Pentium IV motherboards. SDRAM, or Synchronous DRAM is used with just about every other chip sold these days. Rambus uses a different slot (RIMM, which does not stand for Rambus inline memory module!) and electrical format, and runs at 800 MHz over a 16 bit interface. SDRAM uses a 64 bit interface running at up to 133 MHz. (At least if you're not overclocking!) In theory, Rambus can move data much faster than SDRAM, but benchmarks have yet to prove that it offers much of an advantage business apps or games. Factor in its price --a 256 MB stick of SDRAM costs less than half the price of a 128 MB stick of Rambus RIMM-- and the future looks bleak for Rambus on the PC. In any case, Vamsi, you must purchase the RAM that your motherboard was designed to use! Here are a couple of great FAQs. Look up DDR while you're there! It promises similar performance to RAMBUS, but at a signficantly lower cost. At least we hope... it's not shipping in volume yet. http://www.kingston.com/tools/bits/bit31.asp http://www.corsairmicro.com/main/tsdramfaq.html#rambusdiff Thanks for watching! Patrick +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ ***************************ADVERTISEMENT*************************** Outpost.com has the very latest and best in audio & video from Tweeter! FREE OVERNIGHT DELIVERY ON ALL ORDERS OVER $100! http://tm0.com/sbct.cgi?s=117655167&i=304465&d=1047647 ****************************************************************** That's all for today-- keep visiting our site, and keep watching The Screen Savers-- it's good for you! You are subscribed to this newsletter with the following email address: cts-newsletters-html@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx If you would like to unsubscribe at any time, please reply to this message with "UNSUBSCRIBE" in the subject line. 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